English Rights Campaign

to defend the rights and interests of the English nation

Friday, April 28, 2006

QUOTE OF THE MONTH

‘The only type of training that interested management was in the new creed of political correctness. Our schedules were awash with race awareness days, diversity weeks, asylum seminars, though most of these events were worse than useless, their sole aim being to instil guilt into employees ...

As caseworkers, we were compelled to approve almost every entry application that came across our desks, even if we suspected that there was fraud involved.

Patently bogus student visas would be pushed through; in another section of the directorate, work permits would be routinely dished out even when it was obvious they were part of a wider scam. Indeed, the unit in charge of the operation of work permits would not even bother to check whether the jobs being filled were genuine.

The same was true with marriages, where another series of rackets operated. Yet when I would query a certain application, I would be rebuffed by my team leaders and told “not to question immigration rules”.

The truth is that during my time as a civil servant, I worked for a Home Office where mismanagement and the doctrine of political correctness led to chaos and incompetence, while immigration rackets went completely unchecked.’


Steve Moxon [who was sacked from the Home Office 2 years ago after exposing the visa scam allowing east European immigrants to enter the country without any checks at all - which led to Beverley Hughes’s resignation] writing in the Daily Mail.